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Subpoena Issued to Out of State Experts Held to Comply with NC Rules Allowing Recovery of Expert Witness Costs

03 Friday Sep 2010

Posted by McIlveen Family Law Firm in NC Court of Appeals, NC Law

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cost, expert witness, fees, lawsuit, recovery, subpoena

On trial at the People's Court.

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The N.C. Court of Appeals in Jarrell v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority (August 17, 2010) on an issue of first impression considered whether a subpoena issued to an out of state expert witness would be valid for recovery of costs associated with the expert’s testimony at trial.

The Court first addressed the defendants‘ initial argument that, “the Discovery Scheduling Order (DSO) in this case expressly waived the statutory requirement that expert witnesses must testify pursuant to subpoena before the prevailing party may recover expert fees.” “The DSO contained the following language: ‘[a]ll parties agree that experts need not be issued a subpoena either for deposition or for trial and waive that requirement of the statute as it may affect the recovery of costs.’” The Court stated that while they would have found this argument convincing they could not consider it because defendants had not raised the issue before the trial court and it was not considered by the trial court.

Defendants then argued that the subpoenas issued to two out of state expert witnesses to appear for trial in N.C. meet the statutory requirements to allow them to recover costs for the witnesses’ fees and travel expenses. Plaintiff’s did not contest that the subpoenas had been issued but argued that the subpoenas, which were not valid as a N.C. subpoena, could not compel an out of state witness to appear and testify.

The Court stated that the argument the plaintiffs attempted to make belonged to the witnesses and not to the plaintiffs. Therefore, the plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the subpoena unless the non-party witness was objecting to it. The Court held that the subpoenas met the requirements of § 7A-305(d) (11) and also those imposed by § 7A-314 “that the cost of an expert witness cannot be taxed unless the witness has been subpoenaed.” Greene v. Hoekstra, 189 N.C. App. 179, 181, 657 S.E.2d 415, 417 (2008). According to the Court, the statutory requirements for awarding expert witness fees as costs were satisfied and the Court affirmed the trial court’s order granting defendants’ expert witness cost.

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No Waiver of Sovereign Immunity

01 Wednesday Sep 2010

Posted by McIlveen Family Law Firm in Insurance, Insurance Coverage, NC Law

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exclusionary, government, Insurance, lawsuit, N.C., NC, sovereign immunity, waiver

The doctrine of sovereign immunity normally bars complaints against sheriffs deputies sued in their official capacity. A county

may waive sovereign immunity by purchasing liability insurance but only to the extent that coverage is provided. In N.C. a government entity can purchase liability insurance without waiving sovereign immunity. In Owen v. Haywood County, (2010) the N.C. Court of Appeals reviewed the exclusionary provision within the insurance policy, which stated that the insurance did not provide coverage to any claim where the covered person was entitled to sovereign immunity, and concluded that this particular language meant that Haywood County did not intend to waive its sovereign immunity.

Related Articles
  • A Lawsuit Lesson on Sovereign Immunity (reamy.typepad.com)
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Nevada and North Carolina DMCA lawsuits filed – nFusion | Satscams.com

10 Tuesday Aug 2010

Posted by McIlveen Family Law Firm in NC Law

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Communications Act, Copyright, DMCA, filed, lawsuit, N.C.

DISH Network, EchoStar and NagraStar filed suit against Michael Cho, Jason Cho, and Mamertine, Inc. on Thursday evening, June 17, 2010 asserting violations of the Communications Act and Digital Millennium Copyright Act in relation to the import and trafficking in nFusion-brand pirate devices, pirate software, and operation of IKS piracy servers in the United States District Court for the District of Nevada.

Also sued in a separate action in the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina was Kevin Clifton, alleged to have programmed pirate software and operated an IKS server to support nFusion piracy products.

via Nevada and North Carolina DMCA lawsuits filed – nFusion | Satscams.com.

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Lawsuit accuses IBM of Ponzi scheme, seeks more than $100M – Triangle Business Journal

23 Wednesday Jun 2010

Posted by McIlveen Family Law Firm in News

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IBM, lawsuit, NC

Two IBM executives based in Research Triangle Park are among the defendants named in a federal lawsuit brought by a small Philadelphia-area technology company that claims IBM orchestrated a Ponzi scheme that defrauded the company of more than $12 million.

The suit is seeking more than $100 million from IBM (NYSE: IBM).

King of Prussia, Pa.-based Devon IT filed the suit on June 16 in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The companies had been working in a partnership developing a system that consisted of IBM blade servers and a desktop device and software developed by Devon.

In the complaint, Devon claims IBM took the money Devon invested in the partnership and used it to boost earnings figures for Big Blue’s Systems and Technology Group. The complaint alleges that IBM continued the scheme by bringing in new partners to invest in projects. Thomas Bradicich and James Gargan, two RTP-based IBM vice presidents, are among the four individual IBM defendants named in the suit. IBM has not yet filed an answer to the complaint.

Devon attorneys told the Philadelphia Inquirer that besides the $12 million the company invested in IBM the company spent another $20 million to support the products that IBM abandoned. Devon says it is seeking triple the damages, as is permitted under federal racketeering laws.

Armonk, N.Y.-based IBM employs about 10,000 in RTP.

Reporter e-mail: fvinluan@bizjournals.com

via Lawsuit accuses IBM of Ponzi scheme, seeks more than $100M – Triangle Business Journal.

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